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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: New IRS Data Reveals Florida Biggest Winner, New York Biggest Loser In Competition For People & Their Wealth Authored by Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner via Wirepoints.org, Every year, states across the country compete with each other for people and their wealth as millions of Americans move between states. The stakes are large. A growing population for the winners means an increasing tax base, economic growth and investment. For the biggest losers, it means more difficulties in paying down debts, higher taxes and fewer investments for the future. The nations most-recent winners of migration from other states are Florida and Idaho according to the latest migration data released by the IRS. Florida, the nations perennial winner, gained the most people and income overall in 2020, while Idaho gained the most of both on a percentage basis. Those findings are based on a Wirepoints analysis of the latest 2020 domestic migration data provided by the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS reviews tax returns annually to track when and where people move. It also aggregates the ages, income brackets and adjusted gross incomes of filers. Winners and losers The Sunshine State attracted over $41.1 billion in Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) from 624,000 new residents (tax filers and their dependents) that moved into Florida in 2020. On the flip side, Florida lost $17.4 billion in AGI from 457,000 people who left. Overall, Florida came out ahead with 167,000 net new people and $23.7 billion in net new taxable income. Thats a total gain of about 3.3 percent of the states total 2019 AGI ($711 billion). Texas was the runner up with a net income gain of $6.3 billion, followed by Arizona with $4.8 billion. North and South Carolina rounded out the top five with net gains of $3.8 billion and $3.6 billion, respectively. On the losing side, New York suffered the worst outflow of money of any state in 2020. The Empire State lost a net $19.5 billion in income, or 2.5 percent of its 2019 AGI, while a net of nearly 250,000 residents moved out. California was next, losing a net $17.8 billion and 263,000 people. Illinois was third with a net loss of $8.5 billion and 101,000 people. Massachusetts and New Jersey were in 4th and 5th place, with $2.6 and $2.3 billion in income losses, respectively. The cumulative impact of income losses and gains The problem with chronic outflows, like in the case of New York, is that one years losses dont only affect the tax base the year they leave, but they also hurt all subsequent years. The losses pile up on top of each other, year after year. And when a state loses income to other states for 21 straight years, the numbers add up. In 2020 alone, New York would have had nearly $123 billion more in AGI to tax had it not been for the states string of yearly migration losses. And when the states AGI losses are accumulated from 2000 to 2020, it totals $1.0 trillion in cumulative lost income that could have been taxed over the entire period. The opposite is true for migration winners like Florida. Gains in people and income pile on top of each other each year, building an ever-growing tax base. In 2020 alone, the states tax base was some $197 billion higher due to the 20-year string of positive income gains from net in-migration. Even though Florida doesnt tax incomes, Wirepoints also added up Floridas cumulative AGI to make an apples-to-apples comparison with New York. When the Sunshine States AGI gains are accumulated from 2000 to 2020, it totals $1.6 trillion in income that could have been taxed over the entire period. The competition for people matters Illinois, one of the nation's other big losers, shows just how damaging being an exit state can be especially when a state starts to lose its wealthier residents and and they are only partially replaced by people who make less. The Illinoisans who fled in 2020 earned, on average, $30,600 more than the residents Illinois gained from other states. Thats the biggest gap since at least 2000, based on Wirepoints analysis of the IRS data. Based on a percentage of total income, Illinois ranked 2nd-worst nationally for income losses in 2020. Illinois lost 1.9 percent of its 2019 AGI. New York and Alaska ranked 1st and 3rd, with losses of 2.5 percent and 1.3 percent of their 2019 total incomes, respectively. In contrast, Idaho was the nations big winner on a percentage basis in 2020, gaining 4.2 percent of its 2019 AGI base. The nations top five were rounded out by Wyoming, Montana, Florida and South Carolina. Floridas gains and Illinois losses are a clear reminder that states are constantly competing for people, businesses and a growing tax base. The prize for winning is big, but the price for losing may be even bigger. Poster Comment: People are fleeing Donkey controlled states to move to Republican states with lower taxes and a right to bear arms. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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